Ckrowd and School on Air enter new Partnership to disrupt Tech and Educational Curricula in Africa 

Ckrowd and School on Air signed a memorandum of understanding to publish a comprehensive education catalogue bringing affordable education to Young Africans and improve their livelihoods 

election2024

Ckrowd, Africa’s most preferred and premium content streaming platform, and School on Air signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) today to publish an education catalogue that will support young students in Africa and leverage technology to deliver affordable educational programmes.

School on Air, powered by premier Nigerian educational Organisation, Educational Advancement Center, has partnered with Ckrowd to deliver digital STEM classes in Nigerian home-grown languages (Ibo, Yoruba, Hausa & French), which will help to address the language barrier for students who were raised predominantly in their mother-tongue. According to research, many young Yoruba students have shown a greater interest and grew their knowledge retention of STEM subjects by 65 %, when studying in their mother-tongue.  Similarly, knowledge retention, assimilation and interest for STEM by young Hausa students grew by 250% after learning STEM languages in their native language.

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The MoU formalises a framework of cooperation and facilitates collaboration between Ckrowd and School on Air to deliver STEM classes utilising Nigerian local languages, including Yoruba, Igbo, Hausa and French. This initiative will reach more than 40 million young Africans, particularly across West Africa and provide students from different walks of life to access education, learning opportunities and improve their livelihoods. Both organisations will actively work together to build a large educational catalogue, which will contribute to deliver affordable education to many young students across the Continent through the usage of innovative technological tools – all of which will help to achieve the Sustainable Development Goal of inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all.

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Kayode Adebayo, CEO of Ckrowd said: “The MoU we signed today will serve as a good starting point for generating synergies in areas of education, technology and the dissemination and advocacy of knowledge. Ckrowd and School on Air will organise joint STEM classes, seminars and training courses in different West African languages to promote inclusive educational growth for all, even when not using English as lingua franca. This is just the beginning, as Ckrowd is committed to improve lives for the next generations of young Africans, by partnering with tech manufacturing, educational content producers, data and streaming service companies to deliver true value to young Diasporans and Africans on the Continent, creating unique and ad-hoc local solutions and innovation to advance African nations and harness the new dynamic of the digital age, content creation, technology and education.”

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”The collaboration between Ckrowd and School on Air will ensure the dissemination of knowledge and will enable many young students across the Continent to harness Ckrowd’s technology to access a greater pool of education resources in different non-Western idioms. School on Air is excited to promote and facilitate this initiative, which will mutually increase our learning and broaden our collective impact across Africa” commented Mr. Muyiwa Bamgbose, CEO of School on Air.

This agreement aims to bridge the gaps in education across the African continent and provide opportunities that will help students to get themselves equipped with the technical skill sets, professional knowledge and attitude to excel and function at a global level with a comprehensive curriculum to benefit the next generation.

This partnership will disrupt the traditional educational approach across many African nations, but instead encourage talent development, innovation, technology and knowledge advancement by tailoring digital lessons that can reach even those young people that might have been at risk of missing out schools, due to circumstances while ensuring that those lessons are adapted with examples and lexicon that is adaptable to their local experience and language. This will further help to create a next generation of talented STEM professionals who have a glocal understanding of the world and can compete at a global level and advance the Continent.

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